Health & Wellness
The study presented at the annual meeting of the American Association of Cancer Research links eating well-done meat, especially red meat, to an increased risk of pancreatic cancer.
No such relation was found between eating charred meat and colon cancer.
Compared to those who eat steak medium or do not eat steak, individuals with the highest intake of well-done meat are 60-70 percent more likely to develop pancreatic cancer.
FDA health officials have reported that including 1.5 ounces of walnuts in a daily diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol reduces the risk of developing heart disease.
The walnut-based diet can also reduce the risk of developing atherosclerosis - hardening of the arteries. When eaten at the end of a meal, walnuts overcome the damage caused by fatty foods on the arteries, lowering total and LDL (bad) cholesterol levels.
Ali Mohamed Ali Somaa from Qalyubia died of respiratory failure, Egypt's first bird flu fatality of 2009, MENA quoted a health ministry spokesman as saying.
Somaa had been admitted to hospital in late March.
The spokesman also said Ahmed Ramadan Kamal el-Din, a 4-year-old boy from Sohag province, had contracted bird flu and was in hospital. The boy was being treated with the antiviral drug Tamiflu.
There is one - it's called mandalas. The name originates from the Sanskrit, meaning circle. The circle is your magic space in which there are no rules, in which you alone exist, in which your feelings swirl out in lines and colours. It's a form of art therapy.
Benefits of drawing mandalas
Once you finish drawing an angry mandala , you automatically feel inclined to draw a happy one, as you have left the anger behind. You actually feel happy and relaxed after that. Try it out.
Taking vitamin D supplements has become an essential part of seventh-grader Dominique Sermon's diet. With close to zero levels in her system about a year ago, now she's taking a dose of 50,000 international units a month. That's equal to four to five times the recommended daily amount so she can get her levels back up.
"The healthier my body is, meaning getting my vitamin D in, the healthier my body is, the easier it may be to lose weight or to help myself," she says.
In a national study conducted by doctors at New York Hospital Queens, they found that 14 percent of children in general are vitamin D deficient. For the black population, the deficiency is even greater, with 50 percent of teens affected.
In a study released Tuesday by the Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation, Anthony Cahill and his colleagues reported that about 5,596,000 Americans are living with some form of paralysis, defined as a central nervous system disorder resulting in difficulty or inability to move the upper and lower limbs. That is about 40% more than the previous estimate of 4 million.
The benefits increase with duration of past breast-feeding, the study found. Women who had breast-fed for more than a year in their entire lifetimes were almost 10 percent less likely than those who had never breast-fed to have had a heart attack or a stroke in their postmenopausal years. They were also less likely to have diabetes, hypertension and high cholesterol.
The study found that even those postmenopausal women who had breast-fed for just one month had lower rates of diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol, although the risk of heart disease after such limited breast-feeding was comparable to that among mothers who had never breast-fed.
The study found 8.5% of those who played had at least six of 11 addictive symptoms, including skipping chores and homework for video games, poor test or homework performance and playing games to escape problems. The research, which is published in the May issue of the journal Psychological Science, is based on a 2007 Harris poll of 1,179 U.S. youngsters, the first nationally representative poll on the subject.
A new study lends more credence to a long-suspected connection between psoriasis, diabetes and hypertension.
Researchers reporting in the April issue of the Archives of Dermatology suspect the link may have to do with the chronic inflammation that is associated with all three conditions.
A few days later, one of Ms. Ferrell's new colleagues came by her desk. "I said, 'Excuse me, miss, is [her boss] downstairs?'" the 29-year-old told The Observer. "She thought that was very polite that I said, 'Excuse me, miss,' and after that she started talking to me, instant-messaging me. She asked if I was from the South. I told her no. It escalated from there."





